June 5, 2026
Markets are at all-time highs. Rate cuts are off the table. And three of the biggest private companies in history are heading for public markets simultaneously.
The S&P 500 closed above 7,600 for the first time in history this week, while the Dow Jones hit a new all-time intraday high at 51,307. On the surface, everything looks calm.
Underneath, the picture is more complicated.
Artificial intelligence remains the dominant force driving market enthusiasm in 2026 — from semiconductors and cloud infrastructure to industrial suppliers and software. AI-related investments continue to command premium valuations. The anticipated SpaceX IPO has only amplified that enthusiasm.
But enthusiasm and fundamentals are two different things — and the gap between them is worth understanding before making any decision.

Earlier this year, most investors were pricing in Fed rate cuts by mid-2026. That narrative has shifted sharply.
Rising geopolitical tensions and higher energy prices have altered rate cut expectations considerably. Treasury yields have moved higher as inflation expectations increased. Markets are now shifting from discussions about rate cuts toward the possibility that the Fed may need to hold rates higher for longer — or potentially even consider additional increases if inflation persists.
Core PCE — the Fed's preferred inflation measure, excluding food and energy — came in at 3.3% year-on-year, still well above the 2% target. Q1 GDP growth was revised down to 1.6% annualized.
The combination of slowing growth and sticky inflation is not an easy environment to navigate. It is also precisely the environment where asset allocation decisions matter most.
Today's market environment resembles prior periods of technological excitement where optimism about future innovation drove valuations ahead of current fundamentals. The difference this time is the scale of what is coming to public markets.
In the span of one week, three of the most consequential private companies in the world made major moves toward public listings:
SpaceX filed its IPO prospectus targeting a $1.75–2 trillion valuation, with trading potentially beginning June 12 under SPCX.
Anthropic confidentially filed with the SEC following a $65 billion funding round at nearly $1 trillion valuation — reportedly beating OpenAI to the public markets.
Anduril raised $5 billion doubling its valuation to $61 billion, with an IPO flagged as "definitely" on the roadmap.
Alphabet alone announced $80 billion in stock sales to fund its AI buildout, including a $10 billion investment from Berkshire Hathaway. The scale of capital moving into AI infrastructure right now is unlike anything in recent market history.

Three themes converge for retail investors watching from Southeast Asia:
Access remains the core challenge. SpaceX, Anthropic, and Anduril are all pre-public. By the time any of them trade on an exchange accessible through local brokerages, the private value creation will already have occurred.
Gold and defensive assets are performing for a reason. In a high-rate, geopolitically uncertain environment, the same forces driving gold to $4,000 are not going away. Geopolitical and economic uncertainties will continue to drive markets — positive talks around Iran provided brief relief this week, but the Strait of Hormuz remains the most immediate barometer for whether optimism holds.
The jobs data landing today matters. Markets are expecting approximately 93,000 new jobs added in May, with unemployment holding steady at 4.3%. A significant miss would be the clearest signal yet that the economic slowdown is accelerating — and would likely shift market sentiment quickly.
Markets hit record highs on AI optimism, while inflation stays sticky, rate cuts get pushed back, and three private giants quietly lined up for the biggest IPO wave in years — all in the same five trading days.
For informational and educational purposes only. This article does not constitute financial advice.
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